All Episodes

May 20, 2025 • 28 mins

James Blair, White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Legislative, Political and Public Affairs, James Blair joins us to discuss the big beautiful bill that the President and his cabinet have put forward to remedy many of the economic problems we have facing our nation. 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Stay right here for our final news round up and
information overload.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
All right, News Roundup and Information overload. Our toll free.
Here's our numbers, eight hundred nine to four one Sean
if you want to be a part of the program.
When President Trump was elected, well, first of all, before
the election, I would say pretty much every day that
I want to deputize each and every one of you,
and we created on Hannity dot com and social media

(00:27):
what we call the Kamala Files and the Walls Files.
And this was news and information that you would never
get from the corrupt, state run legacy media mob, which
I would argue died on November fifth because they threw
everything they possibly could a Donald Trump, and the American
people ignored them. Now, the President is doing as much

(00:48):
as he possibly can do on his own. And we
were talking earlier in the program with Jim Jordan about this.
I mean, the President has done a phenomenal job securing
the border. It's down ninety nine point nine percent illegal crossings.
The President is now deporting criminal illegal immigrants. I mean
nearly what fourteen to fifteen million. We don't even know

(01:09):
what the actual number is, but we know we have
known terrorists and cartel members and gang members and murderers
and rapists and drug dealers that they have allowed into
this country and we'll have to find each and every
one of them and deport them. We know the President
also is working on the economy, working towards energy dominance.

(01:29):
We know that the President has now what over ten
trillion dollars in committed moneys from countries and companies to
invest in this country in very key manufacturing areas like
pharmaceuticals and silicon chips and automobiles, etc. This is all
big and huge, and he's simultaneously trying to get peace

(01:50):
in Europe and peace in the Middle East. With all
that said, he can't do it all on his own.
With all that said, I said to you back then,
they there will be times I come to you, my
great audience. We're now on what seven hundred and sixty
five stations, whatever the number is, and on serious XM,
and we podcast it and that I might need to

(02:12):
deputize you all once again. This may be one of
those weeks. And the President needs this one big, beautiful bill,
and it did get over the hurdle in the House
and get out of committee. But we need this bill
passed in the House. It needs to be in sync
with the US Senate, especially with their arcane rules as

(02:35):
it relates to reconciliation, which means you don't need to
close your vote of sixty votes, you can pass with
a simple majority. Lindsey Graham made sure that that process
move forward pretty smoothly. And there might be a few
holdouts that could stop the whole thing. Now, in the end,
I don't think that's going to be the case. However,
there is nothing like a little bit of pressure to

(02:57):
motivate politicians. Now, if if there are specific people whose
names come to our attention that are holding out, we
will tell you who they are, and we will give
you their phone numbers in Congress, and we will ask
you to be polite, but let them know that you
voted for the president's agenda, not for their own individual agenda.

(03:19):
Not everyone's not going to get everything they want. It's
just not the way that this process is going to work.
But to make the tax cuts permanent, to do no
tax on tips or social security or over time, to
have money to secure the border and deport criminal illegals,
to move forward with the next generation of weaponry for

(03:40):
our Defense Department and to move towards energy dominance. That
is a huge down payment on the Trump agenda. Anyway,
James Blair is with US White House Deputy Chief of
Staff for Legislative, Political and Public Affairs. Mister Blair, sir,
it's an honor of pleasure and privilege to have you.
How are you.

Speaker 3 (03:59):
Thanks for having me, Sean, It's great to be on
I'm great. Just got back from the Capital a little
bit it go and saw the President and we're getting
to work on the bill.

Speaker 4 (04:09):
As you said, well.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
I had a lot of time to spend with you
on Air Force One, and I think I'm going to
be correct in my prediction about your future. Do you
have any thoughts on that part.

Speaker 3 (04:23):
All I'm worried about is the President's future, which is
passing this great bill, getting the country back on track
and winning the mid terms. I think is possible for
Republicans if they passed the right policies, and as you said,
so much of what the President ran on is tied
up in this first Reconciliation bill and they have a
chance to do something great for the country. You know,

(04:43):
Democrats did a lot of damage to our country via
reconciliation under Joe Biden, and we can do a lot
of good and correct a lot of that to reconciliation
this time around.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
I think you're one hundred percent correct in tying this.
If we if elections are driven by peace and prosperity.
The President's working very hard for peace in Europe and
peace in the Middle East. If if we can get
this bill passed fast enough, a lot of the damage
that was done to the economy and all the other

(05:14):
parts that I mentioned, the trillions committed an investment, the
energy dominance, permanent tax cuts will result in more revenues
to the government. I believe this will exponentially increase the
odds of Republican success in twenty twenty six. I don't
want to think of them losing the House because we
know what the result of that will be. Their agenda

(05:36):
will stop and they'll try to impeach the president.

Speaker 3 (05:38):
Four hundred times one hundred percent, Sean, you know you
got to have first of all, I mean, voters vote
for an agenda, they vote for a person. But the
president laid out a very clear vision of what he
was running for and all he's been focused on through
through his first hundred days and then too now and
into the Summer's Reconciliation bill is making good on his promises,

(06:00):
which is what the American people voted on, and you
know within this bill, I mean, first of all, we're
renewing the twenty seventeen tax cut in Jobs Acts that
Trump passed, which was the largest tax cut in history.
We're extending those tax cuts and making them even bigger.
The Council of Economic Advisors put out a report just
this Monday, SEAN that said people are going to take
an average of nine thousand dollars a year extra home

(06:24):
and take home pay after this passes, from tax cuts
and increased wages. We've got to give people relief. We
know that the terrible policies of the Biden era brought
us four decade high inflation, which has been under control
since President Trump came to office. In fact, the inflation
reports keep coming in lower and lower than predicted each month.
We've added almost five hundred thousand new jobs since the

(06:47):
President came back into office, including tons of manufacturing jobs.
So the Prison's policies are working. What we'd want to
see is working, which is the rewshoring of American manufacturing
giving people the opportunity to have a good job that
pays them a fair wage, that lets some go on
vacation in the summer and afford a home for their family.
That's the American dream and that's what we're trying to restore.

(07:08):
So there's a lot of good in this It's time
for everybody to get on board. Everybody's going to have
to give a little. That's the nature of a close majority.
But you know what, if Republicans vote for this bill, Sean,
they will come back with a bigger majority next cycle.
I'm sure of it.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
I'm actually I agree with you. And that's not something
that's happened very often historically, has it.

Speaker 3 (07:27):
No, it's not just twice in the last hundred years
about has a Republican added to both chambers in the midterms.
A few more times have they added to one chamber
or the other, but only twice in the last one
hundred have they added to both. And one of those,
Sean was in two thousand and two George W. Bush did,
which was obviously after nine to eleven the country was
feeling very unified and patriotic in a very difficult time

(07:50):
for our country. But the other was nineteen thirty four
after the New Deal was passed, and I tell everyone
that's the model to look to. The New Deal was
giving people what they voted for, what they needed in
the time of crises and economic crises, which is what
we were in before President Trump came back into office,
and they were rewarded with a political coalition that's lasted,

(08:14):
you know, almost one hundred years up until twenty twenty four, essentially,
and now the shoe is on the other foot. Republicans
have a chance to solidify those voters that aren't even
really Republicans, they're Trump voters, who are working men and
women of this country that just want the system to

(08:35):
exist that they were raised in, which is if you
follow the rules, you follow the law, you work hard,
you get a job, you do what you're supposed to do,
then you'll have a chance to get ahead in this country.
And that's all we're trying to restore. That's the American dream.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
Shown that ten trillion dollars Now I'm not talking about billions,
ten trillion in committed investment in manufacturing, and that's pharmaceuticals
and semiconductor chips and automobiles and other dust as well.
AI for example, you cannot understate how important that's going
to be for the people that really do make the

(09:08):
country great, hardworking men and women, the people that get
up every day, play by the rules, will pay the laws,
pay their taxes, raise their kids, go to church. I mean,
they're the people that make the country great. Here's my
million dollar question. Are you running into opposition? Are there
people whose phone numbers I'm going to have to give

(09:30):
out on this show.

Speaker 3 (09:31):
I sure hope not, Sean. We may run into that soon. Look,
this is in the house side. It's coming down to
the winding hours here of people getting on the team.
And you know that I'm going to call you up
immediately if We're getting too close to the wire and
people say I'm still a no. We have faith right
now that everyone will get on the team. We believe
that every Republican was in here, and we know everybody

(09:54):
has a little bit of an issue and that they're
most focused on. And obviously there's always shading up until
the end. But you know, other than Thomas Massey, who's
a NO on everything and votes with Democrats one hundred
percent of the time in this Congress, then I think
everyone else, hopefully we'll get on board, and we'll know
within I think hours, not days, because we're going to

(10:16):
vote this week out of the House.

Speaker 2 (10:18):
When do you think that vote takes place right now?

Speaker 3 (10:22):
I would say sometime late well early Thursday morning, kind
of the overnight window Wednesday and Thursday morning.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
And as soon as that happens, it'll go to the Senate.
I assume there'll probably be some changes in the Senate.
Then they'll go into committee and they'll come up with
a final bill and we'll pass through the Senate parliamentarian's
rules as it relates to reconciliation, and then hopefully it
ends up on the President's desk.

Speaker 3 (10:48):
That's it. That's exactly right, Sean. It will go to
the Senate. The Senate will probably spend a few weeks
working on it. They will probably adjust some things, but
the goal is to get it to the President's desk
by July fourth. That's what our Trade re secretary laid out.
Is really important for our economy, to make sure we've
dealt with the debt extension, to make sure we get
our tax cuts in place, and we're really just able

(11:10):
to let businesses and consumers plan for the rest of
their year. And going into next year. And I think
if we do that, the economy is going to absolutely boom. Look,
it's already booming. I mean, you know, if we just
rewind it six weeks ago, people said the president and
know what he was doing with stock market's up higher
than when he came into office. Now, right, So as
long as we get this done, Sean people are going

(11:31):
to get what they voted for, which is a booming economy,
prices coming down, more job opportunities, more take home pay.
And so we just don't have a choice. We got
to get it done. It's what the people wanted, it's
what they voted for, and we're going to give it
to them.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
All right. We continue now with James Blair. He is
the White House Deputy Chief of Staff or Legislative, Political
and Public Affairs. You know, it's pretty amazing we've seen
in our lifetime the Republican Party, especially under President Trump.
Now I'll become the party of hard working men and women.
And I think that's why you're seeing these dramatic demographic

(12:06):
shifts towards the Republican Party and the Democratic Party has
evolved into what I call the party of colostal elites.
And the Party of Woke, and the Party of the
Green New Deal, and the party that just hates and
rages against all things Donald Trump. I don't think that's
much of an agenda that's inspiring to get people to
go out and vote for you. That's my own personal opinion.

Speaker 3 (12:28):
I totally agree. I mean, listen to what Democrats are
arguing for right now. They are going to vote against
the largest middle and working class tax cut in American history.
If they vote against this bill. Okay, they're going to
vote against cutting taxes on tips, cutting taxes on Social Security,
cutting tax and overtime pay. They're going to vote against

(12:49):
all of those tax cuts. They want the right. They all,
almost every single one, Sean voted against stopping men from
playing in women's sports. About that. One of the most
important things to the modern Democrat Party is for men
to have the right to play in women's sports. And
I'll tell you, I got two daughters, Sean. It's totally unacceptable,

(13:10):
it's unfair, and it's just insane. We're trying to bring
common sense back, and the Democrat Party is lost in
the wilderness of special interest groups and far left ideology
that is way out of step with mainstream America. It's
way out of step with common sense. And I think
there's a reason that you know, if you look at
their approval rating, Sean, the approval rating of the Democrats

(13:32):
in Congress right now is like twenty eight percent. Okay,
it's actually lower than Joe Biden at lowest point. And
that's saying something. And there's a reason for that. People
do not like what the Democrats are selling. Sean.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
Listen, the champion the right of men to play women's sports.
They're putting the rights of illegal immigrants over the safety
of Americans. They think it's a constitutional crisis when you
find hundreds of billions of waste, fraud, and abuse. And
they won't stand from mothers that lost their children at
his speech before joined session in Congress, they won't stand
for a young man that lost cancer, that beat cancer. Rather,

(14:07):
they won't stand for a woman that lost her hero
husband in law enforcement, or a young man that just
got commissioned who had lost his father to West Point.
That's that party today that defines them. James Blair, please
stay in touch with us if there's anything we can do.
This is too important to the country and for working
men and women in this country that matter the most

(14:28):
to me, and obviously the president's right and his agenda
in my view, James Blair, White House Deputy Chief of
Staff for Legislative, Political and Public Affairs, he has one
of the toughest jobs he's got to deal with Congress.
Good luck with that. I don't think i'd want your
job to be very honest, but we appreciate your time.
Thank you, sir.

Speaker 3 (14:48):
Thanks Sean.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
Eight hundred and nine four one, Shawn is a number
you want to be a part of the program. I
actually love the exchange. You know, what's his name? Van Holland?
This is Mark or Rubio and Chris van Holland. You know,
mister uh uh abrego Garcia. Let's go to Ol Salvador champion. Uh. Anyway,

(15:12):
here's Marco, just just knocking him about this trip. We
deported gang members, including the one you had a margarite.
This is great in.

Speaker 5 (15:21):
The case of El Salvador. Absolutely absolutely, we deported gang members,
gang members, including the one that you had a margarita with.
And that guy is a human trafficker, and that guy
is a gang banger, and that and the evidence is
going to be clear in the days that.

Speaker 4 (15:38):
Rubio has the floor.

Speaker 6 (15:39):
Chairman.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
He can't make unsubstantiated like that. Secretary Rubio has the floor,
Hedrick Rubo should take that testimony the Federal Fenator, United States,
because well, it hasn't done it under oath.

Speaker 4 (15:50):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
Then it got even more heated when Van Hollins says
he regrets voting for him, And this is what Rubio's
response was.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
And I have to tell you directly in person. Did
I regret voting for you for Secretary of State?

Speaker 4 (16:03):
I yield back.

Speaker 5 (16:05):
I respond, you mean, well, first of all, your regret
for voting for me confirms I'm doing a good job
based on what I know.

Speaker 2 (16:11):
That's a direct statement, Secretary, that is an accurate statement.
All right, let's get to our busy phones. Let us
say hi to Joe and Eli. J our friend, Joe
and l J. Joe's been with this show since my
early days in nineteen ninety two in Atlanta.

Speaker 7 (16:30):
How are you, my friend, Sehan, You're great. This Trump
bill is going to go through. It's going to be
the greatest bill in the history for the taxpayers, for
small business, for the country. It's just great. And so
the big, beautiful bill will be passed and it'll give
us the best economy and best stock market in the history.
And I want to thank you for all you're doing.

(16:52):
I don't think it would pass without your great show
and all all you've done. And you're definitely the best
friend of the American taxpayers in history, the great one
and only.

Speaker 2 (17:02):
Well you're very kind and effusive in your praise. Is
that I'm not worthy of, however, are you. I just
care what's right for the country. You know what I want.
I want. I want a great economy and this has
nothing to do with me anyway. Eight hundred and ninety
four one, Sean Mickey, Texas God bless Texas. Mickey. How

(17:23):
are you.

Speaker 6 (17:25):
Hello? Sean's time caller and a very long time listener and.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
Fan and sol Thank you man. What's going on? How
are you today?

Speaker 6 (17:36):
I'm doing well. I just wanted to call and tell
you that we the American people, we voted for Donald
Trump in November, and we voted for his agenda. And
I call on all of my fellow Americans to rise up,
take a stand, and fight for this big, beautiful bill.

(17:59):
I look very forward, Sean to your posts on who
the holdouts are and how to contact them. I will
be on the phone calling these congressmen. I saw one
I can't remember his name from New York just this

(18:20):
morning stating that he's a no right now after talking
with Trump because he's not getting what he wants on
the salt taxings. And I've got a message for him
that you know, if you get anything, and I know
that they're given concessions. They're trying to give confessions to everyone,

(18:40):
anything is better than nothing.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
And let me tell you they're not going to get
everything they want. Salt will increase right now. The number,
as written in The Villain, my understanding is confirmed by
Jim Jordan earlier in the program today is thirty thousand,
up from ten thousand. Well, frustrates me about falt and
I said it at the time, and I lived in
New York at the time. I'm now, you know, a

(19:04):
full time resident of Florida. I think I've been pretty
outspoken about that.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
And I.

Speaker 2 (19:09):
Rarely ever make it to New York unless you know,
I have to very rare because it's amazing you leave
the state and they come after you with a vengeance.
And if people think it's one hundred and eighty one
days plus or whatever, the number is eighty three days.
It's that you're dreaming. So I don't go. I don't
want to go there. I want nothing to do with

(19:30):
the state. I'm finished with it. And I know too
many people have been harassed to their grave by New
York tax people. But I digress a second, and I
can only tell you in the first term of Donald Trump,
when the salt deduction was reduced to ten thousand dollars,
I ended up paying more taxes. But New York is
a state that should not be rewarded for electing high

(19:51):
tax and spend liberals to their legislatures, the Senate, and
their governors and their mayors, and that's what they do.
And this deduction basically allows people. It gives an added
benefit for all the wrong behavior in terms of voting
behavior of people. Now it doesn't benefit low tax states,

(20:13):
where the citizens of those states elect people that are
fiscally responsible and don't tax and spend their their citizenry
into oblivion. But with that said, I understand that this
is a compromise bill, and I'm going to eat I'm
going to use my own words on myself. I'm not
going to get everything I want here. I think it's
unfair to states that are fiscally responsible. But I understand

(20:38):
to get enough votes to get this passed, this is
just the way the sausage is made. I got it.
I understand. Mickey, You're a great first time caller. God
bless you, God bless Texas. Jimmy Oklahoma. Next Sean Hannity Show, Hi,
what's going on?

Speaker 1 (20:53):
Oh man, this first time caller and my call been
listening to you for a long long time. And thank
you Handity and Handity and combs. I watched that, But yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:04):
I look bad. Look better?

Speaker 6 (21:06):
You know.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
I met some people this week and I was out
to eat and they said, you look so much better
in person. You look skinnier in person, you look taller
in person. I'm like, so, let me let me get
this right. I'm old, short and heavy on TV. Is
that what you're saying. Everyone's kind of last when I
say that.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
Hey, I hope this bill goes through. I really do.
And I'm looking forward to you putting out the the
congressman who who who are voting against it, and I'll
be calling them.

Speaker 2 (21:39):
Well, I will do that, and I'm hoping I don't
have to do it. If you want to know the truth.
I hope, I really am.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
What I was, what I was actually calling about was
a welfare reform and and and I'm just just an ideal.
I mean you maybe you can talk to someone who
can make something happen. And I really believe that if
you know the last fifty years of the next fifty years,
this is the administration that can get something done. And
that's the reason I'm thinking of this. But you know,

(22:08):
all of these manufacturers and these companies that are coming
back to America, it looks like these able bodied people
that's on welfare who could go to work, if maybe
these companies would offer a training program and maybe the
President Trump can maybe offer some tax and sentence for

(22:29):
them to do that, to get these people back to
work and teach them that work and is better than
getting something for nothing.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Listen, I'm going to tell you right now, and by
the way, that there will be incentives and people are
going to able body people will have to work. And
that's part of the bill too. That's another good provision
that's actually in there. But you cannot overstate the importance
of what you're saying here. Ten trillion dollars is a
lot of money. And Donald Trump took a lot of

(22:57):
heat for bringing up the issue of free and fair
trade versus reciprocal and it's their choice. And I can
tell you ten trillion dollars. We're going to bring pharmaceutical
manufacturing home. We're going to start making our own semiconductor chips,
which are vital and critical. We're going to start our
own process of rare earth mineral development. We're going to

(23:22):
be energy dominant. We're going to have tax cuts that
will save American families of fortune. They'll be permanent service workers,
no tax on tips, people that put in the extra
effort work overtime. They're not no tax on overtime. I mean,
it's such a blessing for working men and women. And

(23:44):
the Democratic Party wants the vote against that. Okay, good
luck with that.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
It's crazy. And who would have ever let our adversaries
make our medicine.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
So that was dumb, beyond dumb. We're doing a lot
of things. Is now that we're gonna we're fixing all
of it. And that includes rare earths, that includes pharmaceuticals,
that includes auto manufacturing, that includes the semiconduct I'm telling
you we need to be independent anyway, my friend thank you,
Jimmy John and Georgia John. How are you glad you called?

Speaker 4 (24:17):
I'm good Sean, I'm John the jar Head. I love
my country.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
It was we five, man, how are you five?

Speaker 4 (24:27):
I'm calling about prostate cancer, which is pretty important to
a lot of men. I think it's the number two
killer of men. I was I'm sixty one years old.
I was diagnosed when I was fifty five, and I
had a PSA that was like two point seven.

Speaker 2 (24:46):
By the way, that's the relatively low number. I have
friends that don't have prostay cancer that I have a
higher number that PSA number than you.

Speaker 4 (24:54):
Yes, it was, and I honestly believe I got it
from the Marine Corps. But the Marine Corps seems to
disagree with you. But anyway, we didn't have any testing here,
so I had to go to England. I had a
doctor do a scam.

Speaker 2 (25:09):
How many it was seven years ago?

Speaker 4 (25:12):
Well, yeah, it was actually in Uh yeah, I'm sixty one,
so it was six years ago. We did not have
a PSMA pet scan here, so I had to go
to England for it.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
And he well, they if you PSA, if they thought
it was high, why didn't they just give you a
biopsy because I know because I one year my PSA
doubled and it alarmed. My doctor was also one of
my best friends, and he made me get a biopsy,
which is like the worst thing in the world. And
I won't even explain what happens after. But putting that aside,

(25:44):
and he was like, all right, one day he goes,
just come in, I just want to test it again.
And he was full of crap. He lied to me
and he had two doctors. They had to do a
biopsy in his office. I was like, oh, no, thirteen
long needles, let's put it that way.

Speaker 4 (25:57):
Well, I had a different test. I had an end
were targeted biopsy, had a T three MRI and my
PSA was only two point seven. Well, I had a
T three MRI I done because I had other symptoms
of a possible prostate problem. And the doctor that I saw,

(26:17):
he goes, your gleas and scores are nine. He goes,
I'm taking two guys to London to the Paul Strickland
Cancer Center. You want to go, And I'm like, let's go.
So three days later I went to the Paul Strickland
Cancer Center and it lit me up like a Christmas tree,
and I asked the guy, I said, look how long
do I have? And he goes one year, he goes,
if you fight it, three years, So plan your day.

Speaker 2 (26:40):
Had it metastasized? I don't know a lot of time
did it metastasize?

Speaker 4 (26:44):
It was in my bub it was in my vertebrates.
It was in T three, T four, T five, L
four L five A bunch of ribs, right, Femur Sternhum, yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
Well let me ask you, because we're running out of time,
how were you able to survive seven years? If that
was their prognosis.

Speaker 4 (27:02):
I went to Germany for treatment. We didn't have any
medication here for me, and the Germans have had it
for about fifteen years. So how many men did we
let die in America? I went to Germany and I
got a drug called luttium. Now we have it here
and it's called plavecto. Now most of these, you know,

(27:24):
when it goes to your bones. Most of this is
treated with targeted radiation. And I know they said Joe
Biden has gone to Delaware and you know all these vacations,
but they don't have a proton beam radiation machine there.
I mean they have some in my own.

Speaker 2 (27:39):
The thing is he's a former president of the United States.
He can get any treatment he wants. I promise you, absolutely.

Speaker 4 (27:47):
But what I don't understand it is I've lost the
ability to hunt fish. The pain is one of the
most painful cancers there are. And why would any loved one,
Why would a wife, why would a son, why would
anyone not want I mean, Sean, if your family found

(28:10):
out you had metastatic disease, they would want to treat
you immediately because they love you.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
You have no idea how much my family annoys the
crap out of me about my health now, even though
I work out like a maniac. Well, first of all,
I'm just out of time, so please do not take
this wrong way. But your information is vital. I hope
people paid a very close attention to what you had
to say. And I'm glad you're a life star. I
really am. Thank god you beat this thing, and I'll

(28:36):
take it a step further. I hope Joe Biden can
beat it too. Eight hundred nine one Shawn, All right,
quickbreak right back. We'll continue straight ahead. Eight hundred nine
one Shawn is a number

The Sean Hannity Show News

Advertise With Us

Host

Sean Hannity

Sean Hannity

Popular Podcasts

Amy Robach & T.J. Holmes present: Aubrey O’Day, Covering the Diddy Trial

Amy Robach & T.J. Holmes present: Aubrey O’Day, Covering the Diddy Trial

Introducing… Aubrey O’Day Diddy’s former protege, television personality, platinum selling music artist, Danity Kane alum Aubrey O’Day joins veteran journalists Amy Robach and TJ Holmes to provide a unique perspective on the trial that has captivated the attention of the nation. Join them throughout the trial as they discuss, debate, and dissect every detail, every aspect of the proceedings. Aubrey will offer her opinions and expertise, as only she is qualified to do given her first-hand knowledge. From her days on Making the Band, as she emerged as the breakout star, the truth of the situation would be the opposite of the glitz and glamour. Listen throughout every minute of the trial, for this exclusive coverage. Amy Robach and TJ Holmes present Aubrey O’Day, Covering the Diddy Trial, an iHeartRadio podcast.

Betrayal: Season 4

Betrayal: Season 4

Karoline Borega married a man of honor – a respected Colorado Springs Police officer. She knew there would be sacrifices to accommodate her husband’s career. But she had no idea that he was using his badge to fool everyone. This season, we expose a man who swore two sacred oaths—one to his badge, one to his bride—and broke them both. We follow Karoline as she questions everything she thought she knew about her partner of over 20 years. And make sure to check out Seasons 1-3 of Betrayal, along with Betrayal Weekly Season 1.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.